Climate irresponsibility on social media. A critical approach to "high-carbon visibility discourse"

被引:4
作者
Berglez, Peter [1 ]
Olausson, Ulrika [1 ]
机构
[1] Jonkoping Univ, Sch Educ & Commun, Box 1026, S-55111 Jonkoping, Sweden
关键词
Social media; visual social media; climate change visibility; climate shame; irresponsibility; critique of ideology;
D O I
10.1080/10350330.2021.1976053
中图分类号
C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
Human GHG emissions are entering networked everyday relations. On social media, users potentially "reveal" their carbon footprints when they post pictures of a beef-based dinner or intercontinental travel. As the increasing urgency of climate change coincides with people's increasingly online-oriented lifestyles, we suggest that social-media research should devote attention to the ways in which users overlook, hide, limit, or casually articulate their high-carbon oriented lifestyles in digital space. This would contribute important knowledge about the role of social-media communication concerning climate change as an individual responsibility, and requires a concentration on how status updates become loaded with ideological meaning (high-carbon visibility discourse). The purpose is to present a framework for critical analyses of visual disclosure of carbon footprints in social media use. Media theory, semiotics, network theory and critical theory are combined to theorize how users' activities on social media become high-carbon oriented; their promotion of a business-as-usual stance; and how this operates ideologically through reification, legitimation and unification.
引用
收藏
页码:1011 / 1025
页数:15
相关论文
共 34 条
  • [31] What Content are Companies Publishing on Social Media? Critical Discourse Analysis of Content Published on Blogs, Facebook and Twitter by IBEX 35 and Fortune 500 Firms
    Aced Toledano, Cristina
    Lalueza Bosch, Ferran
    REVISTA INTERNACIONAL DE RELACIONES PUBLICAS, 2016, 6 (11): : 135 - 154
  • [32] A two-step approach to detect and understand dismisinformation events occurring in social media: A case study with critical times
    Yang, Seungwon
    Chung, Haeyong
    Singh, Dipak
    Shams, Shayan
    JOURNAL OF CONTINGENCIES AND CRISIS MANAGEMENT, 2023, 31 (04) : 826 - 842
  • [33] Students' critical awareness of the internet and social media use as resources for Islamic learning in Indonesian public senior high schools
    Jusubaidi
    Mujahidin, Anwar
    Abdullah, Irwan
    Choirul Rofiq, Ahmad
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF RELIGIOUS EDUCATION, 2025, 47 (02) : 140 - 155
  • [34] Hidden emotional trends on social media regarding the Thailand-China high-speed railway project: a deep learning approach with ChatGPT integration
    Nokkaew, Manussawee
    Nongpong, Kwankamol
    Yeophantong, Tapanan
    Ploykitikoon, Pattravadee
    Arjharn, Weerachai
    Phonak, Duangkamol
    Siritaratiwat, Apirat
    Surawanitkun, Chayada
    SOCIAL NETWORK ANALYSIS AND MINING, 2024, 14 (01)